Florin sign
Currency sign
The florin sign (ƒ) is a symbol that is used for the currencies named florin,[1] also called guilder. The Dutch name for the currency is gulden. The symbol "ƒ" is the lowercase version of Ƒ of the Latin alphabet. In many serif typefaces, it can often be substituted with a normal italic small-letter f ( f ).
It is used in the following current and obsolete currencies (between brackets their ISO 4217 currency codes):
Current:
- Aruban florin (AWG)
- Netherlands Antillean guilder (ANG)
Obsolete:
- Dutch guilder (NLG; until 2002)
- Netherlands Indies guilder (until 1954)
- Surinamese guilder (SRG; until 2004)
- Italian florin (until 1533)
References
- ^ The Art of Assembly Language Programming Using PIC® Technology: Core Fundamentals. Elsevier. 15 March 2019. ISBN 978-0-12-812617-2.
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Currencies named florin or similar
- Aruban florin
- Hungarian forint
- Netherlands Antillean guilder
- Polish zloty
- Austro-Hungarian florin (Gulden, forint, zlatý)
- Baden gulden
- Bavarian gulden
- British Guianan guilder
- Conventionsgulden
- Danzig gulden
- Dutch guilder
- East African florin
- Fribourg gulden
- Guldengroschen
- Lombardo-Venetian florin
- Luzern Gulden
- Netherlands Indies gulden
- Dutch New Guinean gulden
- Neuchâtel gulden
- Rhenish gulden
- Schwyz Gulden
- South German Gulden
- Surinamese guilder
- Tuscan florin
- Württemberg Gulden
- Florin (British coin)
- Florin (English coin)
- Florin (Irish coin)
- Florin (Italian coin)
- Florin sign (ƒ)
- {{Groschen}}
- {{Pfennig}}
- {{Thaler}}
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